Directorio Oficial La Camara De Representantes

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Directorio Oficial La Camara De Representantes SEPTIMA LEGISLATURA FILIPINA SEGUNDO PERiODO DE SESIONES Directorio Oficial la Camara de Representantes RICARDO GONZALEZ LLORET Secretario MANILA BUREAU OF PRINTING 1926 SEPTIMA LEGISLATURA FILIPINA SEGUNDO PERfODO DE SESIONES Directorio Oficial la Camara de Representantes RICARDO GONZALEZ LLORET Secretario MANILA BUREAU OF PRINTING 1926 224123 TABLA DE MATERIAS Pagina Lista de los miembros de la Camara de Representantes en el primer periodo de sesiones, por orden alfabetico de apellidos...................... 6 Lista de los miembros de la Camara de Representantes en el primer periodo de sesiones, por orden alfabetico de provincias........................ 9 Lista de los miembros de la Camara de Representantes en el primer periodo de sesiones, por orden alfabetico de apellidos, con especi- ficacion de los Comites permanentes de la Camara a que han sido asignados durante dicho .periodo.................................................................. 12 Resumen de los Representantes por filiacion politica y por profesion 19 Funcionarios de la Camara de Representantes............................................ 20 Comites permanentes de la Camara de Representantes............................ 21 Datos biograficos de los Representantes: Hon. Roxas, Manuel (S peak er).................................................................. 62 Agan, Vicente......................................................................................... 39 Alcazaren, Juan.................................................................................... 76 Almeida, Faus.o..... ............................................................................... 98 Altavas, Jose........................................................................................... 66 Aquino, Benigno S. 166 Arancillo, Asension.............................................................................. 91 Avelino, Jose...................................................... 156 Azanza, Pascual B................... 157 Banson, Manuel S. 38 Bautista, Basilio.................................................................................... 151 Biteng, Lupo............. 85 Braganza, Enrique................................................................................ 142 Briones, Manuel C.............................................................................. 71 Buendia, Andres.................................................................................... 44 Cailles, Juan........................................................................................... 148 Carranceja, Rafael.............................................................................. 58 Clarin, Olegario B.............................................................................. 50 Codamon, Joaquin................................................................................ 149 Confesor, Toifias..................................................................................... 89 Cudilla, V enancio................................................................................... 92 Cuenco, Mariano J .............................................................................. 77 Dacanay, Leoncio.............................. 99 De la Cruz, Servillano..,..................................................................... 144 De la Liana, Pedro..... ......................................................................... 114 De las Alas, A ntonio.......................................................................... 40 3 4 Datos biograficos de los Kepresentantes—Continuacion. Pagina Hon. Dizon, Tomas......................................................................................... 95 Ealdama, Eugenio.............................................. a................................ 87 Escamilla, Antonio G........................................................................... 134 Felipe, Ramon B ................................................................................... 59 Fernandez, Patricio....................................;......................................... 137 Festin, Leonardo................................................................................... 153 Formoso, Vicente......................................................................... 55 Fuentebella, Manuel.... .................... ................................................... 61 Garcia, Carlos P ................................................................................... 51 Gaston, Segundo..................................................................................... 120 Guarina, Mario............................................................................................ 162 Guinto, Leon G..........................................................................*........... 171 Gullas, Paulino....................................................................................... 74 Guzman, Antonio................................................................................... 57 Hernando, Severo.................................................................................... 81 Hilado, Serafin P ...................................................................................... 122 Hilario, Ceferino.........................................................-........................... 141 Kamora, Henry A ............................................................................... 150 Kapunan, Ruperto................................................................................. 104 Labrador, A lejo...................................................................................... 172 Lacson, Isaac........................................................................................... 125 Laico. Ananias....................................................................................... 96 Laserna, Manuel................................................................................. 68 Leuterio, Mariano P ............................................................................ 118 Marcaida, Eduardo............................................................................... 112 Marcos, Mariano................................................................................ 83 Melencio, Jose P ...................................:............................................... 116 Mendoza, Alfonso E .......................................................................... 108 Montejo, Filomeno................................................................................. 105 Morrero, Gerardo................................................................................ 159 Moscoso, Segundo C............................................................................ 36 Nepomuceno, Ricardo........................................................................... I l l Nieto, Manuel......................................................................................... 93 Noel, Pastor B....................................................................................... 79 Oppus, Tomas........................................................................................ 102 Ortiz, Montano A ...................................... 164 Padilla, Jose............................................................................................. 53 Palarca, Sisenando................................................................................. 165 Paredes, Quintin................................................................................. 29 Pena, Francisco B.................................................... 31 Perfecto, Francisco A ........................................ 33 Perfecto, Gregorio................................................................................. 107 Piang, Abdullah.................................................................................... 117 Rama, V icente......................................................................................... 75 Ramos, Simeon.............................. 84 Ramoso, Feliciano................................................................................... 132 Recto, Claro M....................................................................................... 45 5 Datos biograficos de los Representantes—Continuacion. Pagina Hon. Reyes, Juan............................................................................................. 161 Rodriguez, Eulogio............................................................................... 152 Sabido, Pedro........................................................................................... 34 San Agustin, Prim itivo....................................................................... 169 Sanchez, Evaristo P ................................ 146 Serapio, Jose................................:.......................................................... 54 Siapno, Isidoro....................................................................................... 143 Sison, Eusebio V ................................................................................... 145 Soriano, Antero................ 70 Suazo, Arsenio....................................................................................... 116 Torralba, Fermin.............. 48 Torres, Ram on....................................................................................... 124 Valdez Liongson, Pedro................................. 139 Velez, Teogenes....................................................................................
Recommended publications
  • Papal Visit Philippines 2014 and 2015 2014
    This event is dedicated to the Filipino People on the occasion of the five- day pastoral and state visit of Pope Francis here in the Philippines on October 23 to 27, 2014 part of 22- day Asian and Oceanian tour from October 22 to November 13, 2014. Papal Visit Philippines 2014 and 2015 ―Mercy and Compassion‖ a Papal Visit Philippines 2014 and 2015 2014 Contents About the project ............................................................................................... 2 About the Theme of the Apostolic Visit: ‗Mercy and Compassion‘.................................. 4 History of Jesus is Lord Church Worldwide.............................................................................. 6 Executive Branch of the Philippines ....................................................................... 15 Presidents of the Republic of the Philippines ....................................................................... 15 Vice Presidents of the Republic of the Philippines .............................................................. 16 Speaker of the House of Representatives of the Philippines ............................................ 16 Presidents of the Senate of the Philippines .......................................................................... 17 Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines ...................................................... 17 Leaders of the Roman Catholic Church ................................................................ 18 Pope (Roman Catholic Bishop of Rome and Worldwide Leader of Roman
    [Show full text]
  • 2015Suspension 2008Registere
    LIST OF SEC REGISTERED CORPORATIONS FY 2008 WHICH FAILED TO SUBMIT FS AND GIS FOR PERIOD 2009 TO 2013 Date SEC Number Company Name Registered 1 CN200808877 "CASTLESPRING ELDERLY & SENIOR CITIZEN ASSOCIATION (CESCA)," INC. 06/11/2008 2 CS200719335 "GO" GENERICS SUPERDRUG INC. 01/30/2008 3 CS200802980 "JUST US" INDUSTRIAL & CONSTRUCTION SERVICES INC. 02/28/2008 4 CN200812088 "KABAGANG" NI DOC LOUIE CHUA INC. 08/05/2008 5 CN200803880 #1-PROBINSYANG MAUNLAD SANDIGAN NG BAYAN (#1-PRO-MASA NG 03/12/2008 6 CN200831927 (CEAG) CARCAR EMERGENCY ASSISTANCE GROUP RESCUE UNIT, INC. 12/10/2008 CN200830435 (D'EXTRA TOURS) DO EXCEL XENOS TEAM RIDERS ASSOCIATION AND TRACK 11/11/2008 7 OVER UNITED ROADS OR SEAS INC. 8 CN200804630 (MAZBDA) MARAGONDONZAPOTE BUS DRIVERS ASSN. INC. 03/28/2008 9 CN200813013 *CASTULE URBAN POOR ASSOCIATION INC. 08/28/2008 10 CS200830445 1 MORE ENTERTAINMENT INC. 11/12/2008 11 CN200811216 1 TULONG AT AGAPAY SA KABATAAN INC. 07/17/2008 12 CN200815933 1004 SHALOM METHODIST CHURCH, INC. 10/10/2008 13 CS200804199 1129 GOLDEN BRIDGE INTL INC. 03/19/2008 14 CS200809641 12-STAR REALTY DEVELOPMENT CORP. 06/24/2008 15 CS200828395 138 YE SEN FA INC. 07/07/2008 16 CN200801915 13TH CLUB OF ANTIPOLO INC. 02/11/2008 17 CS200818390 1415 GROUP, INC. 11/25/2008 18 CN200805092 15 LUCKY STARS OFW ASSOCIATION INC. 04/04/2008 19 CS200807505 153 METALS & MINING CORP. 05/19/2008 20 CS200828236 168 CREDIT CORPORATION 06/05/2008 21 CS200812630 168 MEGASAVE TRADING CORP. 08/14/2008 22 CS200819056 168 TAXI CORP.
    [Show full text]
  • Senate Publications
    1 PERFORMANCE OF THE SENATE Q FOURTEENTH CONGRESS Second Regular Session July 28,2008–June 3, 2009 Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile Sine Die Adjournment Speech June 3, 2009 A SENATE OF THE PEOPLE My distinguished colleagues in the Senate: When I assumed the leadership of the Senate almost seven months ago, I committed myself to discharge my duties as Senate President ac- cording to my best lights—according to my conscience and my notion of what is good for the country, for our people and for this Institution. It was, I remember, a period of uncertainty, with the global economic crisis casting a cloud of gloom across the nation. Fears of businesses closing shop, of massive job losses and of hunger were real, especially for our countrymen who can barely eke out a living. I issued a call to my colleagues and the entire leadership of this na- tion to act with a sense of urgency to address our people’s most serious problems and concerns as well as important national issues. It was imperative for the Senate to act: to give our people a sense of hope, and to restore their faith in their elected representatives and leaders to rise up to their expectation that we can offer solutions to their problems and difficulties in the face of the economic storm we are faced with. You and I know that there are external forces and events that are beyond our control. But what we can manage and muster is our ability to respond to those events. It is against this backdrop that we, the Senate, should measure what we have done and what we still need to do as we close the Second Regular Session of the 14th Congress.
    [Show full text]
  • Producing Rizal: Negotiating Modernity Among the Filipino Diaspora in Hawaii
    PRODUCING RIZAL: NEGOTIATING MODERNITY AMONG THE FILIPINO DIASPORA IN HAWAII A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE DIVISION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI‘I AT MĀNOA IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN ASIAN STUDIES AUGUST 2014 By Ai En Isabel Chew Thesis Committee: Patricio Abinales, Chairperson Cathryn Clayton Vina Lanzona Keywords: Filipino Diaspora, Hawaii, Jose Rizal, Modernity, Rizalista Sects, Knights of Rizal 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgements……………………………………………………………………..…5 Chapter 1 Introduction: Rizal as a Site of Contestation………………………………………………………………………………………....6 Methodology ..................................................................................................................18 Rizal in the Filipino Academic Discourse......................................................................21 Chapter 2 Producing Rizal: Interactions on the Trans-Pacific Stage during the American Colonial Era,1898-1943…………………………..………………………………………………………...29 Rizal and the Philippine Revolution...............................................................................33 ‘Official’ Productions of Rizal under American Colonial Rule .....................................39 Rizal the Educated Cosmopolitan ..................................................................................47 Rizal as the Brown Messiah ...........................................................................................56 Conclusion ......................................................................................................................66
    [Show full text]
  • Tourism and Health Agency-Accredited Quarantine Hotels for Returning Overseas Filipinos Pal Partner Hotels in Metro Manila
    TOURISM AND HEALTH AGENCY-ACCREDITED QUARANTINE HOTELS FOR RETURNING OVERSEAS FILIPINOS PAL PARTNER HOTELS IN METRO MANILA Updated as of September 2, 2020 (hotel list and rates are subject to change). Download a QR Scanner App for better readability of the reservation QR code. NIGHTLY RATE W/ TELEPHONE RESERVATION LOCATION HOTEL NAME ADDRESS CONTACT PERSON RESERVATION E-MAIL MOBILE NUMBER FULL BOARD MEALS NUMBER QR CODE (IN PHP) Century Park Hotel 599 P. Ocampo St, Malate, +632 8528- Single- 4,000 1 MANILA Roselle Ann Dalisay [email protected] +639176332522 PAL SISTER COMPANY Manila 8888 Twin- 5,500 The Mini Suites- 128 Dela Street, cor V.A. 2 MAKATI Eton Tower Makati Rufino Street, Legaspi Chona Alejan [email protected] 2,800 PAL SISTER COMPANY Village, Makati City The Charter House 114 Legazpi St., Legazpi www.charterhouse.com.ph +632 8817- 3 MAKATI Henry Sitosta +639438318262 2,600 PAL SISTER COMPANY Village, Makati City 1229 [email protected] 6001 to 16 Newport Boulevard, [email protected] Belmont Hotel +632 5318- 4 PASAY Newport City, Pasay, 1309 Wenie Maligaya [email protected] +639178728773 4,500 Manila 8888 Metro Manila m Citadines Bay City Diosdado Macapagal Blvd. Casey Faylona / karlene.capunitan@the- +639175366646 / 5 PASAY 3,000 Manila corner Coral Way Pasay City Honeyleen Tan ascott.com +639178030482 TOURISM AND HEALTH AGENCY-ACCREDITED QUARANTINE HOTELS FOR RETURNING OVERSEAS FILIPINOS PAL PARTNER HOTELS IN METRO MANILA Updated as of September 2, 2020 (hotel list and rates are subject to change). Download a QR Scanner App for better readability of the reservation QR code.
    [Show full text]
  • FILIPINOS in HISTORY Published By
    FILIPINOS in HISTORY Published by: NATIONAL HISTORICAL INSTITUTE T.M. Kalaw St., Ermita, Manila Philippines Research and Publications Division: REGINO P. PAULAR Acting Chief CARMINDA R. AREVALO Publication Officer Cover design by: Teodoro S. Atienza First Printing, 1990 Second Printing, 1996 ISBN NO. 971 — 538 — 003 — 4 (Hardbound) ISBN NO. 971 — 538 — 006 — 9 (Softbound) FILIPINOS in HIS TOR Y Volume II NATIONAL HISTORICAL INSTITUTE 1990 Republic of the Philippines Department of Education, Culture and Sports NATIONAL HISTORICAL INSTITUTE FIDEL V. RAMOS President Republic of the Philippines RICARDO T. GLORIA Secretary of Education, Culture and Sports SERAFIN D. QUIASON Chairman and Executive Director ONOFRE D. CORPUZ MARCELINO A. FORONDA Member Member SAMUEL K. TAN HELEN R. TUBANGUI Member Member GABRIEL S. CASAL Ex-OfficioMember EMELITA V. ALMOSARA Deputy Executive/Director III REGINO P. PAULAR AVELINA M. CASTA/CIEDA Acting Chief, Research and Chief, Historical Publications Division Education Division REYNALDO A. INOVERO NIMFA R. MARAVILLA Chief, Historic Acting Chief, Monuments and Preservation Division Heraldry Division JULIETA M. DIZON RHODORA C. INONCILLO Administrative Officer V Auditor This is the second of the volumes of Filipinos in History, a com- pilation of biographies of noted Filipinos whose lives, works, deeds and contributions to the historical development of our country have left lasting influences and inspirations to the present and future generations of Filipinos. NATIONAL HISTORICAL INSTITUTE 1990 MGA ULIRANG PILIPINO TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Lianera, Mariano 1 Llorente, Julio 4 Lopez Jaena, Graciano 5 Lukban, Justo 9 Lukban, Vicente 12 Luna, Antonio 15 Luna, Juan 19 Mabini, Apolinario 23 Magbanua, Pascual 25 Magbanua, Teresa 27 Magsaysay, Ramon 29 Makabulos, Francisco S 31 Malabanan, Valerio 35 Malvar, Miguel 36 Mapa, Victorino M.
    [Show full text]
  • Napoles Complaint
    Case 8:15-cv-01110 Document 1 Filed 07/14/15 Page 1 of 89 Page ID #:1 M. KENDALL DAY 1 Chief, Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section (AFMLS) 2 MARY BUTLER Deputy Chief, AFMLS 3 DANIEL H. CLAMAN Principal Assistant Deputy Chief, AFMLS 4 ALEXIS J. LOEB, Trial Attorney (Cal. Bar No. 269895) 5 Criminal Division United States Department of Justice 6 1400 New York Avenue, N.W., 10th Floor Washington, D.C. 20530 7 Telephone: (202) 514-1263 Facsimile: (202) 616-2547 8 [email protected] [email protected] 9 EILEEN M. DECKER 10 United States Attorney ROBERT E. DUGDALE 11 Assistant United States Attorney Chief, Criminal Division 12 STEVEN R. WELK Assistant United States Attorney 13 Chief, Asset Forfeiture Section 14 JONATHAN GALATZAN Assistant United States Attorney th 15 312 North Spring Street, 14 Floor Los Angeles, California 90012 16 Telephone: (213) 894-6166 [email protected] 17 Attorneys for Plaintiff 18 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 19 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 20 FOR THE CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 21 22 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) No. CV _ ) 23 ) Plaintiff, ) 24 ) VERIFIED COMPLAINT FOR vs. ) FORFEITURE 25 ) IN REM ) THE PROCEEDS FROM THE SALE OF A 26 ) CONDOMINIUM LOCATED AT THE ) [18 U.S.C. § 981(a)(1)(A), RITZ-CARLTON IN LOS ANGELES, 27 ) 18 U.S.C. § 981(a)(1)(C)] CALIFORNIA; REAL PROPERTY ) 28 LOCATED AT 620 W. ORANGEWOOD ) 1 Case 8:15-cv-01110 Document 1 Filed 07/14/15 Page 2 of 89 Page ID #:2 AVENUE IN ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA; ) 1 REAL PROPERTY LOCATED AT 19545 ) ) 2 E.
    [Show full text]
  • Filipinas República De Filipinas
    OFICINA DE INFORMACIÓN DIPLOMÁTICA FICHA PAÍS Filipinas República de Filipinas La Oficina de Información Diplomática del Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores y de Cooperación pone a disposición de los profesionales de los medios de comuni- cación y del público en general la presente ficha país. La información contenida en esta ficha país es pública y se ha extraído de diversos medios no oficiales. La presente ficha país no defiende posición política alguna ni de este Ministerio ni del Gobierno de España respecto del país sobre el que versa. OCTUBRE 2014 1. DATOS BÁSICOS Filipinas 1.1. Características generales Estrecho de Luzón Nombre oficial: República de Filipinas. Superficie: 298.170 km2. Archipiélago de 7.107 islas. 11 islas más grandes ocupan 94% del territorio. Isla más grande Luzón (105.000 Km. 2), seguida de Mindanao con (95. 000 km2). De Norte a Sur, territorio se extiende en 1850 Km. Mitad de las islas no tienen más de 2.5 Km. Línea de costa es una de las más largas del mundo y se sitúa en 36.289 Km. Océano Pacíco Límites: Situado entre los 4º23’N y 21º25’N de latitud y 116º E y 127º E de longitud. Al sudeste del continente asiático, al este con el mar de Filipinas, al oeste con el mar de la China Meridional, y al sur con el mar de Célebes. Al sur se encuentran las islas Molucas y las Célebes en Indonesia, al sudoeste la parte malasia de Borneo, al noreste Palaos y directamente al norte está Taiwán. Se encuentra a 800 Km. del continente asiático.
    [Show full text]
  • Filipinas República De Filipinas
    OFICINA DE INFORMACIÓN DIPLOMÁTICA FICHA PAÍS Filipinas República de Filipinas La Oficina de Información Diplomática del Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores y de Cooperación pone a disposición de los profesionales de los medios de comunicación y del público en general la presente ficha país. La información contenida en esta ficha país es pública y se ha extraído de diversos medios no oficiales. La presente ficha país no defiende posición política alguna ni de este Ministerio ni del Gobierno de España respecto del país sobre el que versa. DICIEMBRE 2015 1. DATOS BÁSICOS Filipinas 1.1. Características generales Estrecho de Luzón Nombre oficial: República de Filipinas. Superficie: 298.170 km2. Archipiélago de 7.107 islas. 11 islas más grandes ocu- pan 94% del territorio. Isla más grande Luzón (105.000 Km. 2), seguida de Min- danao con (95. 000 km2). De Norte a Sur, territorio se extiende en 1850 Km. Mitad de las islas no tienen más de 2.5 Km. Línea de costa es una de las más largas del mundo y se sitúa en 36.289 Km. Océano Pacíco Límites: Situado entre los 4º23’N y 21º25’N de latitud y 116º E y 127º E de lon- gitud. Al sudeste del continente asiático, al este con el mar de Filipinas, al oes- te con el mar de la China Meridional, y al sur con el mar de Célebes. Al sur se encuentran las islas Molucas y las Célebes en Indonesia, al sudoeste la parte malasia de Borneo, al noreste Palaos y directamente al norte está Taiwán. Se encuentra a 800 Km.
    [Show full text]
  • Today in the History of Cebu
    Today in the History of Cebu Today in the History of Cebu is a record of events that happened in Cebu A research done by Dr. Resil Mojares the founding director of the Cebuano Studies Center JANUARY 1 1571 Miguel Lopez de Legazpi establishing in Cebu the first Spanish City in the Philippines. He appoints the officials of the city and names it Ciudad del Santisimo Nombre de Jesus. 1835 Establishment of the parish of Catmon, Cebu with Recollect Bernardo Ybañez as its first parish priest. 1894 Birth in Cebu of Manuel C. Briones, publisher, judge, Congressman, and Philippine Senator 1902 By virtue of Public Act No. 322, civil government is re established in Cebu by the American authorities. Apperance of the first issue of Ang Camatuoran, an early Cebu newspaper published by the Catholic Church. 1956 Sergio Osmeña, Jr., assumes the Cebu City mayorship, succeeding Pedro B. Clavano. He remains in this post until Sept.12,1957 1960 Carlos J. Cuizon becomes Acting Mayor of Cebu, succeeding Ramon Duterte. Cuizon remains mayor until Sept.18, 1963 . JANUARY 2 1917 Madridejos is separated from the town of Bantayan and becomes a separate municipality. Vicente Bacolod is its first municipal president. 1968 Eulogio E. Borres assumes the Cebu City mayorship, succeeding Carlos J. Cuizon. JANUARY 3 1942 The “Japanese Military Administration” is established in the Philippines for the purpose of supervising the political, economic, and cultural affairs of the country. The Visayas (with Cebu) was constituted as a separate district under the JMA. JANUARY 4 1641 Volcanoes in Visayas and Mindanao erupt simultaneously causing much damage in the region.
    [Show full text]
  • Indigenous Nation-Building and State-Making
    CORE Metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk Provided by Texas A&M Repository BUILDING FROM WITHIN: INDIGENOUS NATION-BUILDING AND STATE-MAKING DURING THE FILIPINO THIRD REPUBLIC, 1946-1957 A Dissertation by TRISTAN MIGUEL SANTOS OSTERIA Submitted to the Office of Graduate and Professional Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Chair of Committee, Jason C. Parker Committee Members, Terry H. Anderson Carlos K. Blanton Brian J. Rouleau Xinsheng Liu Head of Department, David Vaught December 2016 Major Subject: History Copyright 2016 Tristan Miguel Santos Osteria ABSTRACT This study looks at multiple expressions of indigenous agency in Filipino nation- state building from the attainment of Filipino independence in 1946 under the Third Republic. The study begins with postwar reconstruction under the Roxas administration, through the crisis and challenge years of the Quirino years, and the emergence of the strongman of the people, Ramon Magsaysay. Under whom, Filipino nation-making reached its peak years. The study concludes in 1957 with the untimely end of the Magsaysay administration, but with the emergence of a united Filipino people where citizens from all sectors came to be involved. This study argues that Filipinos possessed a natural aversion to communism, which the Third Republic used to consolidate Filipino support, and which prevented the Huks from taking over. Sources of Filipino unity included consolidating all ethnicities. Other sources were overcoming challenges, such as the Huk rebellion and integrating Chinese-Filipinos, Tagalog, and revisions in the educational curriculum. There were many debates surrounding Filipino sovereignty over US bases in the islands.
    [Show full text]
  • Wartime Atrocities and the Politics of Treason in the Ruins of the Japanese Empire, 1937-1953
    Wartime Atrocities and the Politics of Treason in the Ruins of the Japanese Empire, 1937-1953 The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Lawson, Konrad. 2012. Wartime Atrocities and the Politics of Treason in the Ruins of the Japanese Empire, 1937-1953. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:9795484 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA © 2012 – Konrad Mitchell Lawson Some Rights Reserved This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ iii Dissertation Advisor: Professor Andrew Gordon Konrad Mitchell Lawson Wartime Atrocities and the Politics of Treason in the Ruins of the Japanese Empire, 1937-1953 ABSTRACT This dissertation explores the relationship between violence and betrayal in retribution against military and police collaborators who helped maintain Japan’s wartime occupations up until its defeat in 1945. Looking at the approaches taken in the colonies of British Asia, postwar treason trials in the Philippines, and Chinese Communist approaches in wartime and postwar Shandong province, this study argues that the laws and rhetoric of treason were deeply flawed tools for confronting the atrocities of war. At the very moment that war crimes trials were defining a set of acts that constituted crimes against all humanity, around the world thousands of individuals who helped perpetrate them were treated as primarily guilty of crimes against the nation.
    [Show full text]